Connie Ogle,
Miami Herald:
Hilarious and imaginatively crude with a surprising sweet and subtle aftertaste that prevents it from flopping, limp and brainless, into the sugary abyss of romantic predictability.
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Moira MacDonald,
Seattle Times:
The 40-Year-Old Virgin disarms us -- it is, at its heart, a sweet-natured romantic comedy. Unfortunately, you have to clear away a fair bit of debris to find that heart.
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Eleanor Ringel Gillespie,
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
This character-driven comedy, with its excellent cast and let's-get-nutty finale featuring songs from Hair, is well worth your time.
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Nathan Rabin,
AV Club:
Apatow genuinely loves his hero, and the film's innate sweetness carries it through the rough patches of a funny comedy with a central relationship that isn't particularly funny.
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Bill Muller,
Arizona Republic:
A nostalgic, sentimental and wholly bawdy comedy that will make you laugh until your sides hurt.
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Amy Biancolli,
Houston Chronicle:
The whole film is about embarrassment, about those moments of clammy vulnerability when the world just turns and stares.
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Paul Clinton (CNN.com),
CNN.com:
The good-natured tone of the film and the wonderful comedic talents of the entire cast -- especially Carell -- make the gross-out moments charmingly relatable.
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Lisa Kennedy,
Denver Post:
The 40-Year-Old Virgin offers some sparkling insights about the cumulative effects of performance anxiety, about how guys struggle with the transit from boys to men with little help from their pals.
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Owen Gleiberman,
Entertainment Weekly:
The 40 Year-Old Virgin is buoyantly clever and amusing, a comedy of horny embarrassment that has the inspiration to present a middle-aged virgin's dilemma as a projection of all our romantic anxieties.
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Manohla Dargis,
New York Times:
Steve Carell plays the title character in a charmingly bent comedy about a likable geek's progress from action figures to real action.
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Roger Moore,
Orlando Sentinel:
It's a little long, a lot lowbrow. But The 40-Year-Old Virgin is a stitch. See it if you could use a laugh.
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James Berardinelli,
ReelViews:
If you're looking for a successor to There's Something About Mary and American Pie, look no further. It has arrived. And, if I may be so bold, this is more enjoyable than either of them.
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Roger Ebert,
Chicago Sun-Times:
The 40-Year-Old Virgin is surprisingly insightful, as buddy comedies go, and it has a good heart and a lovable hero.
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Stephanie Zacharek,
Salon.com:
If it were 20 minutes shorter, it would be that much closer to perfect.
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Geoff Pevere,
Toronto Star:
The 40 Year-Old Virgin speaks to the geek in us all, it's democratic in its ridicule, and it makes you understand why sometimes a guy just wants to stay home and talk to his toys.
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Time Out:
At its best it resembles one of those classic early-'80s comedies starring Steve Martin -- the thinking man's Woody Allen -- boasting an acute mix of desperation, dignity, lunacy and indecorous wit.
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Claudia Puig,
USA Today:
It's worth making a date with The 40-Year-Old Virgin. You won't go home disappointed.
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Jessica Winter,
Village Voice:
[Continues the trend] whereby ethnic inclusiveness can write a blank check for ethnic stereotyping and the homo-panic jokes are supposed to be on the hetero lunkheads, not on, y'know, the gays.
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